Aid Agencies

March 01, 2017

An important part of the project involves my ability to do actual on-the-ground tests of the pproof of concept. This means working with partners in countries that border Syria — namely Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan (and Iraq, but that place is volatile enough as is).

The challenge then becomes figuring out a way of reaching agencies that would be interested in assisting. I haven’t tried this before, so we’ll need some sort of preliminary strategy. I read this Wikipedia entry on aid in Syria — it describes the organizations involved and the capacity of their involvement. That’ll be a good starting point.

a friend also told me to consider applying to the SU/WFP program here (Applications close: March 13, 2017). This would plug me in directly to the UN WFP, which should make things easier from an implementation perspective.

Strategy

The goal is to get the pilot flight done legally, and as quickly as possible. If I could just pop into Turkey, do the test flight and come back — that’d be ideal (for this initial stage of the project).

The basic strategy here is:

Reach out to Turkish Civil Aviation authority to understand requirements

If local partner required:

reach out to the UN (UNHCR & WFP to begin with) and seek introduction to local partners

If UN unresponsive/unwilling, reach active aid agencies directly

1. Create compelling value proposition

Since I’ll be starting off with the UN, I’d need to understand more about the problem, specifically:

What it costs them to do aid deliveries today

The number of areas that they are unable to reach that this project can directly impact

I’d also need to be very clear about what it is I’m asking from them.

Find active aid agencies

Turkey

After some extensive searching, I came across this list of UNHCR implementing partners in Turkey. There’s another list here on Page 5.

To keep things sane, I fired up a Google sheet to track the status of the different interactions I’m following up on.